From the earth: Greetings
From the earth: Greetings
Recent
developments in astronomy have made it possible to detect planets in our won
Milky Way and in other galaxies. This is a major achievement because, in
relative terms, planets are very small and old not emit light. Finding planets
is proving hard enough, but finding life on them will prove infinitely more
difficult. The first question to answer is whether a planet can actually
support life. In our own solar system, for example, Venus is far too hot and
Mars is far too cold to support life. Only the Earth provides ideal conditions,
and even here it has taken more than four billion years for plant and animal
life to evolve.
Whether a
planet can support life depends on the size and brightness of its star, that is
its 'sun'. Imagine a star up t twenty times larger, brighter, brighter, and
hotter than our own sun. A planet would have to be a very long way from it to
be capable of supporting life. Alternatively, if the star were small, the
life-supporting planet would have to have a close orbit around it and also
provide the perfect conditions for life forms to develop. But how would we find
such a planet? At present, there is no telescope in existence that is capable
of detecting the presence of life. The development of such a telescope will be
one of the great astronomical projects of the twenty-first century.
It is
impossible to look for life on another planet using earth-based telescopes. Our
own warm atmosphere and the heat generated by the telescope would make it
impossible to detect objects as small as planets. Even a telescope in orbit
around the earth, like the very successful Hubble telescope, would not be
suitable because of the dust particles iron solar system. A telescope would
have to be as far away as the planet Jupiter to look for life in outer space because the dust becomes thinner the further we travel towards the outer edges
of our own solar system. Once we detected a planet, we would have to find a way
of blotting out the light from its star, so that we would be able to 'see' the
planet properly and analyze its atmosphere. In the first instance, we would be
looking for plant life, rather than 'little green men'. The life forms most likely
to develop on a planet would be bacteria. It is bacteria that have generated
the oxygen we breathe on earth. For most of the earth's history, they have been
the only form of life on our planet. As Earth-dwellers, we always cherish the
hope that we will be visited by little green men and that we will be able to
communicate with them. But this hope is always in the realms of science
fiction. If we were able to discover lowly forms of life like bacteria on
another planet, it would completely change our view of ourselves. As Daniel
Goldin of NASA observed, “Finding life elsewhere would change everything. No
human endeavor or thought would be unchanged by it."
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